OneDrive
List, upload, and download OneDrive files. Microsoft cloud storage from your agent.
Details
OneDrive skill connects your agent to OneDrive for file listing, upload, and download. For teams in the Microsoft ecosystem.
When to use
Use when the agent should access OneDrive files. Requires Microsoft Graph; pairs with Outlook and Teams for full Microsoft flow.
How OneDrive fits into your OpenClaw setup
The case for OneDrive is the same as the case for any good productivity skill: the work it handles is not hard, it is just constant. Calendars, notes, reminders, and small recurring chores generate dozens of interruptions a week, and each one costs more in broken focus than in actual time. Moving them into chat — where the assistant handles them on request or on schedule — is where OpenClaw quietly pays for itself.
A typical session
Using it is deliberately unremarkable: you send a message, the assistant recognises the job belongs to OneDrive, does it, and tells you what changed. The habit takes about a week to form. After that, the things you used to switch apps for become things you mention in passing — and the assistant picks them up without ceremony.
Installing OneDrive
Getting it running is straightforward: run the command below from the OpenClaw directory and restart your assistant. The one step people skip — and regret — is reading the README first. If the skill needs an API key, a token, or account permissions, sorting that before the first request saves a confusing debugging session.
When the assistant comes back online, give it one easy request that only this skill can handle. If it responds correctly, you are done. If not, you have caught the problem while the install is still fresh in your mind — far better than discovering it mid-task next week.
clawhub install one-driveGetting the most out of it
Skills compound. OneDrive on its own is useful; combined with the rest of a well-chosen toolkit, it becomes part of workflows the assistant strings together without being told. Browse the rest of the ClawHub catalogue with that in mind — the best setups are built around how you actually work, not around individual features.
And if you would rather not assemble this yourself, we do it for a living: OpenClaw installation, a skill set chosen and configured around how you work — including OneDrive where it fits — and custom skills built where the catalogue stops short.